Wow, without the box and signed letter, the bid closed at over $370,000. And.. it is NTI run, one of the first run was just sold by Huston brother on Ebay at below $80,000 a couple week ago. I can imagine that the Apple 1 replica kit now posted on EBay can run over $2000 at least.

The one on eBay from the Huston brothers was a very damaged/hacked on board and didn't run. It also had replaced components. The one that sold today was a pristine NTI board with original parts. It had all the original documentation and was a known running unit. Most aren't. Also currently the NTI boards seem rarer to have survived, though this could change. I expect a bunch of unknown boards to appear over the next year or so....

Yes, the replica kit on eBay is a Mimeo. Right now complete kits are unavailable so the price goes up for people who want one from someone who has one.

I think Mike will have to raise the price of the Mimeo kits when he makes more as parts are becoming much harder to get and much more expensive. I don't blame the auction if he has to raise prices. I applaud Mike for being able to keep the price down for so long, but I think a lot of that is because he bought a ton of the hard to find stuff years ago. As he runs out and has to locate and replace those parts he will have to rethink the price. I can tell you to replace the parts he includes in the kit on your own could cost you as much or more than the eBay Mimeo unless you are very lucky or get together with a bunch of friends to meet line item and order minimums.

I don't think the seller was the one who purchased it for 22k. Remember out of the $374,500 price, the seller has to pay auction fees which is something like 20% and income taxes, so in the end I don't think they could go out and buy a nice house with the proceeds depending on how much they paid for the board. However they can have a nice addition to their kid(s) college fund...

It was for a very dusty pre-NTI board. Didn't go see this one in person (my week in NJ was busy so no trips to NYC) so I can't tell you the condition, but it had no original documentation and didn't run. The pictures on the Christies site was ok but not detailed and no backside pictures to verify the condition. I guess they really didn't want it to sell or they would have done a lot of press like Sotheby's and would have cleaned it up before taking pictures. They also could have taken more pics. Also Mike Willegal thinks this is a new board to the registry. He updated it already to reflect that.

Lesson learned if anyone here is selling their board. Don't use Christies! Apparently Sotheby's is the way to go

Interesting, I guess Christie's doesn't like bad press. It was lot 94 on June 22. I watched it live online and it didn't sell with bidding at $65k. I didn't think they would take down the page so I didn't save a copy.

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